The Sunday Guardian

Recovering from ruins & turmoil, Haiti strives to become key tourist attraction

- CLAIRE DODD

Ashipping container is lodged in a wall in Côteaux, on Haiti’s southern peninsula. Upside down, and perched on a spit of land between the road and the ocean, it leans at a precarious angle held in place by bent pieces of rebar. But with few trees left standing, it’s as good a place as any to seek shade. A few people sit in its shadow.

It’s late March and we’re the first tourists to return to the area with adventure travel company G Adventures, since Hurricane Matthew hit on 4 October. It’s hard to visualise what 145 mileper-hour winds can do until you see it.

The town’s Catholic Church is rubble. A life-size, headless Jesus shelters by one of the few intact walls. Where houses have been completely flattened, people have rebuilt them with found fragments of roofing. Blue tarp canopies with the words “Samaritan’s Purse” are a sign the aid agencies have been in. Occasional UN trucks trundle down the road.

“You used to not be able to see anything but the sea from here. It was all trees,” says Eliovil John Baptiste. Our guide to the caves of Grotte Marie Jeanne, he’s led us up the hillside above the neighbouri­ng town of Port-a-Piment. The view — of the azure sea and white-sand beaches the area is known for — is still beautiful. And the hotels and restaurant­s along the coast are open, serving fresh lobster and fish.

The caves, one of the largest cave systems in the Caribbean, are a key attraction in the area. Crystal formations and vast hanging stalactite­s adorn successive nooks and yawning cavities. The roof of the visitor centre was blown off. But the hurricane also uncovered a new 100m chamber. Eliovil is keen for people to know the caves are still open. He wants visitors.

“The best way to help a community and an area is to come and visit,” says Valérie Louis, executive director of the Associatio­n Touristiqu­e d’Haïti which represents Haiti’s private sector players. “Helping NGOs is not the way. I think a lot of people are realising that tourism is the only way.”

It’s been seven years since an earthquake brought this culturally rich but economical­ly impoverish­ed Caribbean nation to its knees. Still wearing the scars from that disaster, the country is now picking itself up from another. But after a year of political paralysis, as elections stalled and an interim government was drafted, new President Jovenel Moïse is finally in place.

“We have a problem in that Haiti, for quite a while, was not on the tourism map,” says new minister of tourism, Jessy Menos, speaking to The Independen­t just three days into the job. Developing tourism, she says, is the second priority in developing the nation. “Haiti is the poorest country in the Caribbe- Citadelle La Ferrière in Haiti . an. Now we have to change it to the richest. Because Haiti is not poor — we’ve had bad management. We have things that are the envy of our neighbours.”

It’s a poignant irony that Haiti’s rich culture and stunning landscapes — from soaring mountains to tumbling waterfalls — are so intact because there’s been such little developmen­t. “That’s the advantage of Haiti — it’s like time stopped with us,” says Louis. But things are changing. Yoga retreats and surf schools have also emerged in recent years.

Other big projects aimed at bringing back the tourists include the controvers­ial developmen­t of Île-à-Vache — a resort billed as “the next St Barts” that’s displaced 10-15,000 locals in its bid to build 1,000 rooms for tourists. And in 2014, Carnival announced plans to develop a £55m cruise port at Tortuga island on the north shore. With the new government in place, the project soon may be resurrecte­d. And there’s also work underway to promote Haiti as a twin destinatio­n with neighbouri­ng Cuba. Haitian airline Sunrise already offers two routes.

The stop- start nature of the fledgling tourism industry has not been kind to some would — be entreprene­urs who also have a vision for what Haiti could offer travellers. Catherine Barrière, owner of the Auberge du Rayon Vert in Port-Salut left her native France to open the five- room hotel in 2005 after falling in love with the country. In 2013, after news that the local airport at Les Cayes would soon be open to internatio­nal flights, they added 20 It’s a poignant irony that Haiti’s rich culture and stunning landscapes — from soaring mountains to tumbling waterfalls — are so intact because there’s been such little developmen­t. rooms — but the internatio­nal flights never materialis­ed. Neither did the expected tourism boom. Now running the hotel alone following her husband’s death, and with a loan to pay off, she’s concerned about the future. Our group of five were the only guests in the hotel during our visit — and with no state power supply since the hurricane, she’s having to ration electricit­y to night-time only to keep costs down.

“I can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel right now,” she says. “We were targeting tourism, but unfortunat­ely, the country’s infrastruc­ture didn’t follow. The reservatio­n book is pretty empty and things are not going well. Basic infrastruc­ture should be dealt with first — after that, we can think about tourism.”

Giving communitie­s ownership of projects and the direct ability to have a financial stake in them will, of course, be crucial if the country is serious about using tourism as a means to broadly lift the living conditions of its citizens. Menos says it’s important to balance major projects with responsibl­e tourism and smaller scale work that directly involves communitie­s.

But things take time, especially in the stop-start climate in Haiti. The Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n awarded a £35m grant to rehabilita­te Haiti’s UNESCO World Heritage Site, the 19th-century Citadelle near Cap-Haitien in the north. The largest fortress in the Americas, it’s a symbol of Haiti’s independen­ce — it was built following the successful slave uprising which won independen­ce from France. The grant will go to improving access and promoting the area to the tens of thousands of cruise passengers at Labadee.

But what would the effect of mass tourism have on Haitian culture? Clearly there is a balance to be struck between attracting numbers significan­t enough to help improve Haiti’s infrastruc­ture, and responsibl­e tourism, like G, that benefits communitie­s directly.

But looking purely from a visitor’s point of view, there is already much to lure travellers, especially those looking to experience that rarest of things; a non- commercial­ised destinatio­n. But being one of just a handful of tourists at each staggering place that you visit also serves to underline Haiti’s huge tourism potential. The question is, where does it go from here? THE INDEPENDEN­T

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